Abstract

Abstract In a simple cohort model we carry out a projection based on current per capita age profiles of labour income and consumption and combine them with expected future age compositions. We use 2012 Hungarian data. Due to a shrinking and ageing population this exercise predicts a growing gap between labour income and consumption implying that the difference would be covered by asset-based revenues. We apply two balancing items: a windfall capital endowment in the base year, and gradual capital accumulation through higher savings. We also quantify how much the household economy, an integral but unregistered part of a modern economy, can absorb the effects of ageing. In addition, we test against a model using demographic data from 1995. The two decades between the mid-1990s and the mid-2010s offered a special demographic opportunity for Hungary and coincided with the botched pre-funding experiment in the public pension system. We demonstrate the potential of this missed opportunity.

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